[Quote

The CPI (Maoist) claims that it has been forced to take up the gun
because over the past four decades central and state governments have
violently suppressed the Naxalite movement whenever it has been able
to organise the poor. Suppression by the State is a fact but this is
an erroneous explanation, for the gun is central to the Maoist
politics of waging an armed struggle to overthrow the State. The
constant use of violence to protect and expand influence has
inevitably begun to define of the character of the party. The result
is that the CPI (Maoist) now has more of a militarised identity than a
political one. Naturally, the violence of the Maoists increasingly
mimics the violence of the State. Even if there can be no symmetry
between the two, the consequences of the CPI (Maoist)’s militarised
form of functioning are many. It is horrifying that the CPI (Maoist)
now has little qualms in even justifying murderous retribution in its
fight against the State (see unedited interview of Azad, CPI (Maoist)
spokesperson, with The Hindu). This is unacceptable coming from a
political formation that claims to want to build a new and just
society.

...

Ultimately, what is at test in the conflict is not the politics and
violence of the CPI (Maoist) but the very institution of Indian
democracy. For wherever the CPI (Maoist) has built up some influence
it has done so because the fault lines in Indian democracy have made
people in some of the most deprived regions of the country deeply
resentful of the State. It is the organs of the State that are now in
the dock for their cumulative failure to respect and guarantee the
rights of all Indians. The Indian state is so enamoured of its
(perceived) status as an economic and political power on the
international stage that it does not see what is happening on its
periphery. The adivasi anger is only one of many, albeit small, fires
burning in the country. (It is somewhat strange that even as Hindutva
continues bit by bit to undo the basic tenets of the Constitution, it
is the CPI (Maoist) which is seen as posing the “greatest ever
internal security challenge” to the State.)

Unquote]


Economic & Political Weekly EPW april 24, 2010 vol xlv no 17 7

Can There Be Any Hope?

*What will it take for the State to correct its failings and for the
Maoists to shed their militarised character?*

All of India knows that even as many Indians have benefited
from the rapid economic growth of the past quarter
century, millions have also been marginalised by the
so-called transformation.
 This division has given a new edge in marketised India to the
long-standing fracture between the “Two Indias”. There is now the
thriving India – mainly urban, skilled and entrepreneurial, with
close links to the globalised world – which acts as if the other India
does not exist. This other India – mainly rural but also the underbelly
of the cities – has been left behind because it has neither assets
nor skills. The poor also have to cope with a collapse in public
services. The trend now is for the thriving India to “secede” socially,
economically and even politically from the rest of India. But it
still has to deal with the other India because it needs its labour
and needs its land, water, forests and all manner of natural
resources that belong to the marginalised in order to fuel its
growth and beautify its cities. This new division of Indian society
is emblematic of the weaknesses of Indian democracy.
Much is often made of the vibrancy of Indian democracy,
the
deep stakes that the people of India have come to develop in it
and the fact that an ever-increasing number of Indians – across
castes, classes and gender – participate in the formal electoral
process. All this is indeed true, but at the same time it is apparent
from everyday life that many of the institutions of democracy have
failed. The procedural aspects of democracy – such as accountability,
transparency and governance – are largely non-functional.
Working through the democratic process, citizens have obtained a
number of rights but it is a daily struggle to exercise even a measure
of these rights. Six decades after the constitution of the Republic
it is not enough to point to the spaces that exist within a malfunctioning
institution as evidence that it offers hope and opportunities
to all. The institutions of democracy are widely and perhaps
rightly seen as having been captured by the rich and the powerful.
And the next fear must be that the gradual spread of the cancer
of Hindutva communalism through many public institutions
and the organs of the State will eventually complete the hollowing
out of Indian democracy.
 The Communist Party of India (Maoist) is neither the first nor
the only one to organise the marginalised against the forces of
exclusion. But the Maoists have certainly jolted the “9% growth”
mood of self-congratulation in the corridors of power. For close to
half a century and through various cycles of activity, many
groups of Naxalites have been working with some of the poorest
of the poor for justice, dignity and rights that are supposed to be
guaranteed under the Constitution. The impact of the Naxalite
movement has varied, depending on the nature of the group and
the area it works in. In parts of northern Andhra Pradesh and in
the Dandakaranya region of central India, decades of persistent
organisation by various strands of the Naxalite movement have
resulted in a few gains in the form of payment of minimum wages,
an end to extreme forms of oppression by local landlords and
agents of the State and, most important, a sense of self-respect.
The irony is not sufficiently recognised that it has taken a political
party committed to the scrapping of the Constitution to effectively
deliver on a measure of basic rights.
 Today the Maoist movement is equated with the struggle of the
adivasis in Dandakaranya. The adivasis undoubtedly make up
the most marginalised group in India. They have always been at
the mercy of one particular organ of the Indian state, the forest
department, which has stubbornly sought to deny them their traditional
rights to land and forest resources. The Naxalite groups
that preceded the CPI (Maoist) chose Dandakaranya three decades
ago to set their “guerrilla zones” as part of their long-term strategy
to capture state power through an armed struggle. From all
reports, the Maoists have gained the support and trust of a substantial
proportion of the adivasi population in certain tracts of
Dandakaranya by fighting the corruption of the forest department
and oppression by local contractors. This, as is well known,
has even found mention in the 2008 report of the expert group
constituted by the Planning Commission.
 The CPI (Maoist) has grown in strength in mineral-rich
Dandakaranya. So given its strategy of wresting an ever-expanding
area from the state administration, it was inevitable that the
State would eventually respond with brutal force. The ugly face
of the Indian state has been on display since 2005 in Chhattisgarh
when, with the blessings of the state government (and the silent
approval of New Delhi), the Salwa Judum set citizen upon citizen.
While the strength of the Maoists in the region does come in the
way of the mining plans of Indian and foreign companies,
it is a
simplistic view and fits in with a binary understanding of the masses
railed against the Indian state to see the State’s response in terms
of clearing the way for mining operations.
 With its strategy of using paramilitary forces to “recover areas”
from Maoist control, Operation Green Hunt – a deeply offensive
term that reveals what the central government wishes to do with
and what it thinks of some citizens – can only cause a bigger tragedy
than the Salwa Judum. Some features of a civil war are already
with us – indiscriminate arrests, fake encounters, and imprisonment
of minors (by the State) and execution of “informers”
(by the Maoists). The foot soldiers of the Central Reserve Police
Force are set against the adivasi recruits to the People’s Liberation
Guerrilla Army of the CPI (Maoist). The 75 jawans killed at
Chintalnar-Tarmetla village in Dantewada district of Chhattisgarh
earlier this month may well be followed by another terrible
killing, this time by government forces. The “body count” of one
side will be compared with the “body count” of the other.
There will be assassinations and attacks by the Maoists (“to
enthuse [the cadre] with daring counter-offensives” as one CPI
(Maoist) statement described it last year). The State, on its part,
makes the frightening promise to “study all options” and it has for all
practical purposes suspended civil liberties in the areas of Maoist influence.
Maoism has also become useful for the State to brand and
suppress as extremist any movement that dares to confront the
powers-that-be. (It is at the same time important to stress that the
Maoist movement itself is not as widespread as the CPI (Maoist)
or the State would have us believe, each for its own reasons.) The
other side of this phenomenon is that it has not been uncommon
for the Maoists themselves to take over an independent movement.

*Militarised Identity*
The CPI (Maoist) claims that it has been forced to take up the gun
because over the past four decades central and state governments
have violently suppressed the Naxalite movement whenever it has
been able to organise the poor. Suppression by the State is a fact
but this is an erroneous explanation, for the gun is central to the
Maoist politics of waging an armed struggle to overthrow the
State. The constant use of violence to protect and expand influence
has inevitably begun to define of the character of the party. The
result is that the CPI (Maoist) now has more of a militarised
identity than a political one. Naturally, the violence of the Maoists
increasingly mimics the violence of the State. Even if there can be
no symmetry between the two, the consequences of the CPI
(Maoist)’s militarised form of functioning are many. It is horrifying
that the CPI (Maoist) now has little qualms in even justifying
murderous retribution in its fight against the State (see unedited
interview of Azad, CPI (Maoist) spokesperson, with The Hindu).
This is unacceptable coming from a political formation that claims
to want to build a new and just society.
 The party hands out its brand of justice by, for instance, assassinating
Laxmanananda Saraswati of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad in
Kandhamal district of Orissa in August 2008, but it does not foresee,
or worse, may not care, that the retribution by the Hindutva groups
would be savage and will permanently scar the lives of thousands
of minority citizens. As K Balagopal perceptively observed in this
journal in 2006, the Maoists have acquired considerable military
expertise but their political development has stagnated.
 The institution of summary courts that deliver summary
justice, the shadowy and autocratic manner in which the Maoists
function, their intolerance of dissent and the use of “levies” on
traders and contractors (i e, extortion) to mobilise finance, and the
attempts to influence and take over sympathetic organisations
are many other aspects of their functioning that should make any
one worry about the movement. The CPI (Maoist) also has an
instrumental view of the adivasis. Thus, the Panchayat Extension
to Scheduled Areas Act which is meant to give the adivasis
greater control over their resources (but has not been implemented
by state governments) never figures in the Maoist campaign,
for if it was implemented the adivasis would end up with more
control over their lives.

*Indian Democracy in the Dock*
Ultimately, what is at test in the conflict is not the politics and
violence of the CPI (Maoist) but the very institution of Indian
democracy. For wherever the CPI (Maoist) has built up some influence
it has done so because the fault lines in Indian democracy
have made people in some of the most deprived regions of the
country deeply resentful of the State. It is the organs of the State that
are now in the dock for their cumulative failure to respect and
guarantee the rights of all Indians. The Indian state is so enamoured
of its (perceived) status as an economic and political power
on the international stage that it does not see what is happening
on its periphery. The adivasi anger is only one of many, albeit
small, fires burning in the country. (It is somewhat strange that
even as Hindutva continues bit by bit to undo the basic tenets of
the Constitution, it is the CPI (Maoist) which is seen as posing the
“greatest ever internal security challenge” to the State.)
 Which way then for the CPI (Maoist) versus the State conflict? In
the immediate term, the open conflict has to end. It goes without
saying that even after the tragedy of Chintalnar-Tarmetla, the
central and state governments have to demonstrate a measure of
sagacity and foresight to halt all paramilitary offensives and disband
the Salwa Judum. The most marginalised of Indian society
at the very least have a right not to be in a theatre conflict.
The CPI (Maoist) has, of course, been very keen on “talks” for
that will lift the siege it is now under. Agreement on the modalities
of such discussions between the CPI (Maoist) and the State is
not essential for both sides to first end the war-like situation. Yes,
the past experience (notably in Andhra Pradesh in 2004) with
“peace talks” has not been a happy one for either the State or the
Maoists. But the people of Andhra Pradesh did enjoy a respite
from state and Maoist violence for at least a few months and so
too will the people of Dandakaranya. In the medium term the
State must lift its ban on the CPI (Maoist) and give it the freedom
to openly work among the people; the big question though will
be the possession of arms.
 Beyond the immediate and the medium term, we need a different
kind of Indian state and a different kind of CPI (Maoist). Can
we imagine both the State and the CPI (Maoist) respecting and affirming
the basic rights of citizens? Can we imagine institutions of
the State responding to the needs of all groups of citizens and fulfilling
the lofty promises of the Constitution? Can we imagine a
CPI (Maoist) that also effects a fundamental transformation and
sheds its militarised identity?
 On such hopes must rest our imagination.


Economic and Political Weeklyhttp://epw.in


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Peace Is Doable

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